4.7 Article

Lyophilization Preserves the Intrinsic Cardioprotective Activity of Bioinspired Cell-Derived Nanovesicles

期刊

PHARMACEUTICS
卷 13, 期 7, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13071052

关键词

cell-derived nanovesicles; exosome mimetics; bionanotechnology; lyophilization; trehalose; cardioprotection

资金

  1. National University of Singapore, NanoNash Program [R-148-000-296-114, R-148-000-284-114, R-148-000-297-114, NUHSRO/2020/002/NanoNash/LOA]
  2. Nanyang Technological University, Singapore [001487-00001]
  3. RIE2020 Advanced Manufacturing and Engineering (AME) Industry Alignment FundPre-Positioning (IAF-PP) grant [A20G1a0046, R-148-000-307-305]
  4. Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine Nanomedicine Translational Research Programme [NUH-SRO/2021/034/TRP/09/Nanomedicine]
  5. National University of Singapore [CFGFY20P14]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study introduced a lyophilization approach to preserve critical characteristics of cell-derived nanovesicles (CDNs) for long-term storage, ensuring structural integrity and biological activity. Trehalose as a lyoprotectant raised the glass transition temperature and reduced residual moisture content of CDNs, maintaining the secondary structure of cellular proteins. Both lyoprotected and freshly prepared CDNs targeted and protected injured hearts within 24 hours in a myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury animal model, highlighting their potential as stable cell-based therapeutics.
Recently, bioinspired cell-derived nanovesicles (CDNs) have gained much interest in the field of nanomedicine due to the preservation of biomolecular structure characteristics derived from their parent cells, which impart CDNs with unique properties in terms of binding and uptake by target cells and intrinsic biological activities. Although the production of CDNs can be easily and reproducibly achieved with any kind of cell culture, application of CDNs for therapeutic purposes has been greatly hampered by their physical and chemical instability during long-term storage in aqueous dispersion. In the present study, we conceived a lyophilization approach that would preserve critical characteristics regarding stability (vesicles' size and protein content), structural integrity, and biological activity of CDNs for enabling long-term storage in freeze-dried form. Compared to the lyoprotectant sucrose, trehalose-lyoprotected CDNs showed significantly higher glass transition temperature and lower residual moisture content. As assessed by ATR-FTIR and far-UV circular dichroism, lyophilization in the presence of the lyoprotectant effectively maintained the secondary structure of cellular proteins. After reconstitution, lyoprotected CDNs were efficiently associated with HeLa cells, CT26 cells, and bone marrow-derived macrophages at a rate comparable to the freshly prepared CDNs. In vivo, both lyoprotected and freshly prepared CDNs, for the first time ever reported, targeted the injured heart, and exerted intrinsic cardioprotective effects within 24 h, attributable to the antioxidant capacity of CDNs in a myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury animal model. Taken together, these results pave the way for further development of CDNs as cell-based therapeutics stabilized by lyophilization that enabled long-term storage while preserving their activity.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.7
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据